Is genocide even possible if the being in question is some magically corrupted beyond recognizable other being? I’ve always felt the orcs/goblins were under a spell basically, they cannot choose to turn “good” because they are being mind controlled by magic and can’t be restored.
I guess in scifi terms maybe the best comparison would be the borg or something(yes I know there are a ton of examples of accidents restoring free volition) and there isn’t really anything to do but mercy kill them basically.
I don’t remember if this was canon or our own interpretation, but kobolds grew up to be goblins, which became orcs, which became hobgoblins, then ogres, then trolls, then giants… they just kept growing until they were Titans, if they lived that long.
I know that orcs and goblins are supposed to be the same thing, but I do like the Jackson-created visual difference where goblins are all spidery and skittery and lean, and orcs are taller and beefier. Even so, it’s easy to look at a 25 year old American heavy-weight lifter and a 12 year old Chinese gymnast and see equally extreme body differences, so they can still be the same species, just vastly differently raised/fed/maintained.
I always felt sorry for them, actually. I learned that they were corrupted elves, and always wondered if there was some part of them that knew they were horrible twisted mutations and suffered from really awful self-hatred, or if they were all Stockholm-syndromed or just plain utterly misinformed like North Korean citizens.
I sort of wish Tolkien had stayed with the original idea of Noldor = Gnomes. The Silmarillion would have been drastically different, but it might have been interesting.
I don’t think that was ever really an idea, just a name. That is to say, the Noldor were always of the same species as the other Elves, and always matched the same general description; it’s just that that particular clan of the Elves went by the name “gnomes” (or, more precisely, they went by a name that could be translated into English as “gnomes”). I don’t think Tolkien ever intended for the Noldor to be short, or bearded, or to wear Phrygian caps, or whatever.
I wish the unhappy little thing, representing all that I came (so soon after) to fervently dislike, could be buried for ever.
—J.R.R. Tolkien
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Was it Treebeard who said that just as Orcs are corrupted Elves…
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I don’t recall anyone *saying *that, but it’s my recollection that Morgoth did not *create *anything, he only corrupted them. I’d reckon it was written in The Silmarillion.
My recollection (don’t have the books handy, sorry) is that Morgoth and Sauron could not create anything original, only mockeries of other people’s creations. Treebeard’s line gave me the impression that the Enemy tried to create his own version of an Ent, and Trolls were the best he could manage.
I don’t recall if the Silmarillion explicitly stated whether Orcs were corrupted Elves, or Morgoth’s attempt at an original creation. I think Tolkien left some gray area in the matter, and I have read that, later in his life, he was on the verge of changing his mind an re-writing the Orcs’ origins.
If I remember correctly, Chris Tolkien mentioned – maybe in one of the HOME books – that he regretted including that comment in the Silmarilion about the origin of Orcs. It seems to have been an interim theory of JRRT’s that he still hadn’t decided. Nonetheless, it has generated a lot of speculation, discussion, and argument over the years.